11

Public Ethics, Legal Accountability, and the New Governance

Laura S. Jensen and Sheila S. Kennedy

During the past century, American governance has been transformed fundamentally. The scope of government action has increased at all levels of the federal system. Moreover, the means through which government addresses public problems have changed radically. Where public functions originally were performed primarily by state actors, and later delegated to closely related agents of the state, discretion over the day-to-day operation of public programs now routinely rests not with the responsible government agencies, but with a host of nongovernmental, third-party surrogates or proxies that provide programs under the aegis of loans, loan guarantees, grants, contracts, vouchers, and other new tools of public action. This exercise of core governmental authority by non- and quasi-governmental entities is perhaps the most distinctive feature of America’s “new governance” (Salamon 2002, pp. 1–2; Kettl 1988, 1993).

Many observers are sanguine about this delegation of authority because they expect public problem solving to be enhanced by cross-sectoral partnerships. That private delegation does not comport with long-standing theories of public administration is not troubling, they suggest, for in the increasingly interdependent world of implementation networks, “no entity, including the state, is in a position to enforce its will on others” (Salamon 2002, p. 15). As Lester Salamon argues, the command and control of the sovereign, once the hallmark of democratic government, has become outmoded, and is being replaced by a new management paradigm that “makes collaboration and negotiation legitimate components of public administrative routine rather than regrettable departures from expected practice” (2002, p. 15).

We take issue with the notion that the transfer of sovereignty to nongovernmental agents is merely a management problem, because legal restrictions on the use and reach of public authority are fundamental to the United States’ political and constitutional order. Explicit legal standards of right and wrong are a defining feature of American government (Frederickson 1993, p. 248; see also Rohr 1998). Substituting new forms of collaboration and management for hierarchical, bureaucratic chains of command cannot and should not mean abandoning traditional commitments to the public values of liberty, equality, and fairness. Nor should it obviate public actors’ obligations to meet the standards for government behavior that stem from those values and are incorporated in public law. As Donald Kettl has observed (1993, p. 40), the government “is not just another principal dealing with another agent.” The skepticism about government performance that has fostered the development of privatized governing arrangements in the United States has not yet been translated into lack of concern over how public authority is deployed.

Nowhere can this be seen more clearly than in the ongoing scandal over the abuse of prison inmates in Iraq, an international relations debacle of some magnitude. Before four contractors were killed in Falluja at the end of March 2004, few Americans were probably likely aware of the roles played by publicly paid, nongovernmental agents in the U.S. occupation. The April 2004 release of graphic photographs showing the sexual abuse of Iraqi prisoners incarcerated in the Abu Ghraib jail outside of Baghdad (a facility notorious for torture and execution under the rule of Saddam Hussein) has turned the expanding and largely unregulated role played by private contractors overseas into front-page news (Borger 2004; Miller and Miller 2004). It is now widely known that the U.S. government relies upon private contractors in Iraq not only for such tasks as mail delivery and foreign language interpretation, but also for intelligence gathering, the provision of security services, and the conduct of prison interrogations. As outrage over the events at Abu Ghraib escalates, questions of accountability are being raised in the United States and abroad. Who, precisely, is responsible for what happened? U.S. President George W. Bush? High-level Pentagon officials? The military personnel charged with running the prison? The nominally private employees still involved in operations at Abu Ghraib, who work for contracting U.S. firms CACI International and Titan Corporation?1

In our view, the incidents at Abu Ghraib and elsewhere demonstrate that the new governance’s central challenge is not simply to enhance flexibility in governing partnerships so that innovation and performance may flourish, but to do so while still assuring legal accountability for the means and ends of public action. This is not an arcane legal problem, but a challenge that presents policy makers and citizens with a fundamental ethical dilemma. We rely upon our understanding of the state and state action in order to know when we may expect certain standards to apply to public programs and those who manage them, and when we may ask the courts to intervene and impose restraints upon misconduct or inappropriate uses of public authority. If we do not know what actions we may properly attribute to government, our constitutional rights and freedoms are undermined. Yet to subject every government vendor to constitutional constraints would effectively eviscerate the concept of private and weaken, not strengthen, liberty and creativity (Minow 2002, p. 30). If we are to maintain a vibrant, pluralistic polity that is governed effectively, efficiently, and accountably, we must be able to draw meaningful distinctions between private actions and actions taken on behalf of the state, and oversee the latter competently.

In this chapter, we will describe the principle of legal accountability that is at the heart of U.S. constitutional structure and demonstrate the difficulties involved in depending upon judicial review as an enforcement mechanism. We will do so by analyzing the federal judiciary’s “state action” jurisprudence, which was neither consistent nor reliably protective of citizens’ rights even before the advent of the highly privatized new governance. Next, we will review the record of the City of Indianapolis’s privatization efforts to illustrate how the legitimacy of government depends upon our ability to distinguish public from private, and hold public actions and actors to account. We will conclude by calling for a refashioned law of state action applicable to the operational realities of contemporary “government by proxy” arrangements.

State Action in a Changing State

American governance fundamentally is premised upon the idea that the U.S. Constitution and public law more generally, places limits upon the actions that government may take. Adherence to the standards established in public law is essentially what transforms governmental rule from an exercise of raw power into a legitimate use of democratic authority. For governance to be accountable,2 the limits imposed by public law must apply to all governmental action and be enforceable, whether the tasks of government are accomplished by actors who are officially public or nominally private. This poses major challenges in the United States’ increasingly mixed regime, for the jurisprudence intended to keep exercises of government authority subject to public law’s strictures has not kept pace with the ways in which privatization initiatives have been refashioning the nature of the state and state action (Gilmour and Jensen 1998; Kennedy 2001; Barak-Erez 1995; Metzger 2003).

The legal doctrine of state action was first defined by the U.S. Supreme Court shortly after the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, when the Court was called upon to define the extent to which that amendment protected the privileges and immunities of citizenship against inappropriate action by state government. In Virginia v. Rives (1879, p. 318), the Court declared that the Fourteenth Amendment applied “to State action exclusively, and not to any action of private individuals,” adding that all state action counted, whether legislative, executive, or judicial. Similarly, in the landmark 1883 Civil Rights Cases, the Court held that the amendment’s prohibitions applied to “all State legislation, and State action of every kind,” including all “acts done under State authority” (pp. 11, 13). The “individual invasion of individual rights,” by contrast, was “not the subject-matter of the amendment” (p. 11).

Over the past century, the Supreme Court repeatedly has reiterated that an “essential dichotomy” exists between state action and private conduct (see, e.g., Shelley v. Kramer 1948; Jackson v. Metropolitan Edison Co. 1978; National Collegiate Athletic Association v. Tarkanian 1988). State action is subject to judicial scrutiny for conformance with the numerous federal, state, and local rules that apply to government behavior, including the Bill of Rights and the Fourteenth Amendment; a host of general management statutes, such as the Administrative Procedure Act and the Freedom of Information Act; the terms of administrative regulations, executive orders, and budget circulars; antidiscrimination statutes, such as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Americans with Disabilities Act; and importantly, at the state and local levels, Section 1983 of the Civil Rights Act of 1871. Private conduct, no matter how discriminatory, wrongful, or unfair, is not subject to scrutiny under these rules (though legal remedies may otherwise be sought through criminal prosecution, contract or regulatory enforcement, or common law actions).

However fundamental this dichotomy may be in principle, it has been difficult even for the courts asserting its existence to say what, precisely, separates state from private conduct in practice. Consider, for example, the disparate findings in two cases from the 1980s in which the Supreme Court reviewed the behavior of doctors treating dependent populations under the aegis of government funds and authority. In West v. Atkins (1988), an essentially unanimous Court decided that a private physician under contract to provide medical care to state prison inmates was a state actor. Although the doctor was not technically a government employee on the public payroll, the state’s control over service delivery in the correctional context was held to render the doctor’s conduct attributable to the state. In Blum v. Yaretsky (1982), by contrast, a divided Court allowed the State of New York summarily to reduce or eliminate the long-term care benefits of Medicaid patients upon the recommendation of private nursing home personnel. Although the nursing facilities received government funding and the benefit decisions in question were made pursuant to a state cost control policy, the Court held that the deprivation of patient benefits was not state action, because ultimately it resulted from judgments made by private physicians and nursing home administrators “according to professional standards that [we]re not established by the State” (p. 1008).

The Supreme Court has reached similarly disparate conclusions in a set of decisions involving organizations that govern the conduct of amateur athletics. In San Francisco Arts & Athletics, Inc. v. United States Olympic Committee (1987), a divided Court upheld the U.S. Olympic Committee’s ( USOC) decision to exercise its authority under the Amateur Sports Act of 1978 to selectively ban a gay rights organization from using the word “Olympic” in the name of an event it sponsored. Despite USOC’s status as a corporation created by federal law and its extensive authority over international athletic competition, the Committee was not held to be a state actor. Nnor was the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), in a case in which its essential monopoly on rule making for college athletics forced a state university to impose disciplinary sanctions upon a tenured employee (NCAA v. Tarkanian 1988). Recently, however, in Brentwood Academy v. Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association (2001), a five-member majority found that the Tennessee nonprofit organization that regulates high school interscholastic sports was a state actor, and it could be held accountable for violations of the Fourteenth Amendment.

As privately operated prisons and detention facilities have become more common, cases that challenge their management have begun to work their way through the judicial system. The lower federal courts recently have not hesitated to hold prison contractors accountable for their behavior as state actors, often noting that the power to deprive an individual of liberty is a quintessentially governmental power (Plain v. Flicker 1986). In Skelton v. Pri-Cor, Inc. (1991), for example, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit found that a private corporation operating a state corrections facility could be held liable as a state actor for violating the civil rights of an inmate. Similarly, in Blumel v. Mylander (1996), a U.S. District Court in Florida held that a private contractor that detained a man in a Florida jail for thirty days without a hearing was liable as a state actor for a due process violation. In Giron v. Corrections Corporation of America (1998), the New Mexico District Court decided that a private contractor’s employee had engaged in state action when he raped an inmate in his capacity as a prison guard.

Even so, the federal courts do not speak with one voice in their decisions concerning the use of delegated authority in situations where plaintiffs are captives of the state, and thereby subject to whatever treatment is meted out in institutional settings. For example, a U.S. District Court in Texas held a private residential youth treatment facility liable as a state actor for the wrongful death of a twelve-year-old boy in Lemoine v. New Horizons Ranch and Center, Inc. (1998), but the U.S. Court of Appeals reversed (19899). In Wade v. Byles (1995), a U.S. District Court in Illinois held that contractors that provide security at a public housing complex were not state actors, despite the fact that the security guards had the authority to carry guns, arrest people, and use deadly force. In a case involving alleged constitutional violations by privately employed prison guards in Tennessee, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to grant the guards qualified immunity, even though such immunity would clearly have been granted to guards employed directly by the state (Richardson v. McKnight 1997). These cases are difficult to reconcile.3

Little wonder that state action jurisprudence has been termed a “conceptual disaster area” (Black 1967, p. 95). As one commentator wryly has noted, the Supreme Court’s “sifting” and “weighing” of the facts in state action cases differs from Justice Stewart’s famous “I know it when I see it” standard for identifying obscenity “mainly in the comparative precision of the latter” (Brest 1982, p. 1325). According to Federal Judge Henry J. Friendly (1982, p. 1291), what we know about the distinction between public and private action is more “because the Court has pricked out more reference points than because it has elaborated any satisfying theory.” The Court itself acknowledges that its state action decisions “have not been a model of consistency.”4